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The Economics Of Cassava, Corn And Yam - Politics - Nairaland

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Tinubu, Sanusi, Subsidies And The Economics Of Empathy By Farooq A. Kperogi / Recruit 50 Million Youths Into Nigerian Army, Give Them Cassava, Corn And Yam To / Tinubu: Recruit 50million Youths Into The Army, Feed Them Cassava And Yam (2) (3) (4)

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The Economics Of Cassava, Corn And Yam by Parachoko: 4:23pm On Nov 09, 2022
I have listened to the speech of a famous politician repeatedly where he said, “recruit 50 million youths into the Army.

What will they eat? Cassava, Agbado, Corn, Yam……it is grown here”. Though now turned comical, the message should not be lost on the government and the entire citizenry. This article intends to focus on the import and not on political orientation

Firstly, Nigeria is a country with a high unemployment rate. The latest report shows that people below 30 years constitute about 70% of the population. Broken down, below 15 years is 42%, while 15 years to 30 years is about 28%.

While the United Nations defines youth as those “persons between the ages of 15 and 24 years without prejudice to others”, the Nigeria Youth Policy (2009) defines youth as 18 – 35 years though a new policy (2019) now puts it at 18 – 29 years. To put it in perspective, Nigeria has a youth population of about sixty-one (61) million if we go by an estimated total population of 219million.

The Unemployment rate is the share of the labour force without work. However, they are available and seeking employment. It currently stands at 33% (2022). It has grown over the last five years against a population growth rate of 2.6%.


Yam market



Wikipedia puts the unemployment rate in Brazil at 9.5%, Indonesia at 5.8%, Pakistan at 4.4%, and Nigeria at 33.3%. If this is anything to go by, we may be able to draw an inference that there is a relationship between the size of a country’s army and the (Un) employment rate. I consider this my assumption.

Fourthly, in a country where managing the foreign exchange rate has become more physical, having “defied all known economic theory” or even spiritual rather than the interplay of demand and supply, Nigeria needs to, more than ever before, look inwards. Looking inwards will reduce the pressure on the foreign reserve. It means the consumption of locally made goods and services. It will lead to self-sustenance. One way this can happen is to produce our food and kill our penchant for foreign-made goods and services.

Common staple foods in Nigeria are Cassava, Corn, Yam and permit me to add Beans. They all have by-products that we can make into different flavours and diets. It graces the table of families from the North, South, East and West of Nigeria. All of them are grown in Nigeria with no soil preference. They can be for subsistence or large-scale commercial. They have also proved to have high export value.
For instance, Cassava has an annual export potential of $2.9bn. Nigeria’s production capacity for Cassava is 59.5million metric tonnes. It is unable to meet demand by a shortfall of 775metric tonnes combined for flour and starch. The sum of $427.3million is what we realize from domestic value addition and $2.98billion in export. Nigeria contributes 21% to global output in terms of production

Another instance is Corn; Nigeria’s production capacity is 11metric tonnes while our consumption stands at 15metric tonnes, leaving us with a 4metric tonnes gap. Of the production, only 10% is for household consumption as food, while the rest is industrial, ranging from animal feed to breweries. An example is in Q3 2020 alone, when Nigeria spent N26.6bn importing maize from Argentina and three other countries. Experts projects that Nigeria will pay $285million on Maize importation by 2029.

Lastly, the alternatives to these products consumed in Nigeria today are finished products of the same food items packaged abroad and imported into the country.

For instance, we import sweet corn and cornflakes into Nigeria under different brands worldwide. Nigeria spends an estimated $22bn on food importation annually, which is about 5% of GDP. Most of these food items are produced locally. Some critical sectors are begging for that allocation.

The government and citizens should think of the mileage we can all collectively derive from engaging in habits that will not only generate employment but motivate local production, export and consumption of locally made goods and services.

https://guardian.ng/opinion/the-economics-of-cassava-corn-and-yam/
Re: The Economics Of Cassava, Corn And Yam by duro4chang(m): 4:24pm On Nov 09, 2022
I so much like Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu the incoming president of Nigeria. On your mandate we stand gidigba

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Re: The Economics Of Cassava, Corn And Yam by Afamed: 4:30pm On Nov 09, 2022
The children of hate are not well enlighten. As it stands now, grain is one of the exporting items that is still surviving Ukraine in the midst of the war.

The children from the east, their parents fed them with grains when they were growing up and now, they still can not stay without Okpa, a product from grain
Re: The Economics Of Cassava, Corn And Yam by Parachoko: 4:27pm On Nov 22, 2022
duro4chang:
I so much like Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu the incoming president of Nigeria. On your mandate we stand gidigba
cool

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